Post on 03-Jan-2017
WINDBLATTENERCON Magazine for wind energy Issue 01 | 2010
www.enercon.de
NEW ADDITIONS TO PRODUCT PORTFOLIOENERCON joins the 3 MW class
Page 6
FORUMViana do Castelo: ENERCON impresses financial partners and customers
Page 8
TECHNOLOGYMulti-megawatt class: E-126 turns into 7.5 MW turbine
Page 10
INTERNATIONALRenewables in Antarctica: Three E-33 turbines supply Scott Base & McMurdo Station
Page 12
JOB PROFILEService installation technician: Placing the large components
Page 16
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Editorial
ENERCON News
News from the ENERCON world
Title Story
New additions to product portfolio:ENERCON joins the 3 MW class
Forum
Viana do Castelo: ENERCON impresses financial partners and customers
Technology
E-126 turns into 7.5 MW turbine
First deployment of ENERCON‘s new giant crane
International
E-70 turbine No. 100 installed in Taiwan
Renewables in Antarctica: Three E-33 turbines supply Scott Base & McMurdo Station
Bear Mountain Project:A new benchmark for site practices
Job Profiles
Service installation technician: Placing the large components
Suppliers
Harting Technology Group: Connectors and seawater-proof housings for the wind industry
Interview
Rémi Gruet: Wind energy to play crucial role in international climate agreement
Addresses & Events
ENERCON AddressesInfo-Service
ImprintPublisher: ENERCON GmbH · Dreekamp 5 · 26605 Aurich · Germany · Phone +49 4941 927-0 · Fax +49 4941 927-109 · www.enercon.de/en/_home.htmEditorial office: Volker Uphoff, Ruth Brand, Teelke BojarskiPrinted by: Steinbacher Druck GmbH, Osnabrück, GermanyCopyright: All photos, illustrations, texts, images, graphic representations, insofar as this is not expressly stated to the contrary, are the property of ENERCON GmbH and may not be reproduced, changed, transmitted or used otherwise without the prior written consent of ENERCON GmbH.Frequency: The WINDBLATT appears every three months and is regularly included in the “new energy”, magazine for renewable energies, of the German Windenergy Association.Subscribe: Phone +49 4941 927-667 or www.enercon.de/en/_home.htm.Cover photo: E-82/2.3 MW prototype in Lower Saxony, Germany.
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International sales offices
ENERCON GMBH, SALES DEPT.
ENERCON Sales (headquarters) · Dreekamp 5 · 26605 Aurich · Phone +49 4941 927-0 · Fax +49 4941 927 669
ENERCON Sales Bremen · Otto-Lilienthal-Str. 25 · 28199 Bremen ·GERMANY · Phone +49 421 2441 510 · Fax +49 421 2441539 ·E-mail: sales.international@enercon.de
ARGENTINA
ENERCON Soporte Area Argentina · Blanco Encalada 1204-4/B ·C1428DCJ Ciudad de Buenos Aires · ARGENTINIA · Phone + 54 11 47 886 114 · Fax + 54 11 47 886 114 · E-mail:windpower@ciudad.com.ar
AUSTRIA
ENERCON Austria Ges.mbH · Hauptstrasse 19 · 2120 Wolkersdorf · AUSTRIA · Phone +43 2245 82828 · Fax +43 2245 82838 · E-mail: enercon@vienna.at
BALTIC STATES/EAST ASIA
ENERCON Denmark · Bredkær Parkvej 62 · 8250 Egaa · DENMARK ·Phone +45 87 430 388 · Fax +45 87 430 344 · E-mail: joern.kristensen@enercon.de
BELGIUM
ENERCON Services Belgium BVBA· Sales Belgium · Bernhard Fink · Stationsstraat 97 · B-2440 Geel · BELGIUM · Phone +32 14 591 611· Fax +32 14 591 612 · E-mail: bernhard.fink@enercon.de
BRAZIL
Wobben Windpower Ltda. · Av. Fernando Stecca nº 100 · Distrito Industrial CEP 18087450 · Sorocaba · São Paulo · BRAZIL · Phone +55 15 2101 1700 · Fax +55 15 2101 1701 · E-mail: wwp@wobben.com.br
CANADA
ENERCON Canada Inc. · 1000 de La Gauchitière Street West · Suite 2310 · Montreal, Québec · H3B 4W5 · CANADA · Phone / Fax +1 514 363 7266 · E-mail: sales.canada@enercon.de
FRANCE
ENERCON GmbH bureau français · 1, rue des Longues Raies · ZAC des Longues Raies · F-60610 La Croix Saint Ouen · FRANCE · Phone +33 3 44 83 67 20 · Fax + 33 3 44 83 67 29
GREECE
ENERCON GmbH · Greek Branch · 20, Pentelis Avenue · 15235 Vrilissia, Athens · GREECE · Phone +30 210 6838 490 · Fax +30 210 6838 489 ·E-mail: sales.hellas@enercon.de
ITALY
ENERCON Italia · Via Luciano Manara, 5 · 00044 Frascati (Roma) · ITALY · Phone + 39 06 94 01 69 1 · Fax + 39 06 94 01 69 299 ·E-mail: info@enerconitalia.it
LUXEMBURG & THE NETHERLANDS
ENERCON Benelux BV · Paxtonstraat 1 a · 8013 RP Zwolle · THE NETHERLANDS · Phone +31 38 4228 282 · Fax +31 38 4228 010 · E-mail: sales.benelux@enercon.de
NEW ZEALAND
ENERCON GmbH · Andrea von Lindeiner · PO Box 340206 · Birkenhead · Auckland 0746 · NEW ZEALAND · Phone +64 9 4199 231 · Fax +49 4941 976 959-147 · E-mail: andrea.vonlindeiner@enercon.de
PORTUGAL
ENERCON GmbH Sales Portugal · Parque Empresarial de Lanheses · Lugar de Segadas · 4925 424 Lanheses · Viana do Castelo · PORTUGAL · Phone +351 258 803 500 · Fax +351 258 803 509 ·E-mail: sales.portugal@enercon.de
SPAIN
ENERCON GmbH Sucursal en España · Ronda de Auguste y Louis Lumière 23 · Edificio 21 A · Parque Tecnológico · 46980 Paterna (Valencia) · SPAIN · Phone +34 961 824 558 · Fax +34 961 828 143 ·E-mail: enercon.spain@enercon.de
SWEDEN
ENERCON Energy Converter AB · Stenåldersgatan 19 · 21376 Malmö · SWEDEN · Phone +46 40 143 580 · Fax +46 40 222 420 · E-mail: scandinavia@enercon.de
TURKEY
ENERCON GmbH · Sales Turkey · Holger Bohlen · Dreekamp 5 · 26605 Aurich · GERMANY · Phone +49 4941 927-0 · Fax +49 4941 927-109 ·E-mail: holger.bohlen@enercon.de
Editorial
The new EU Energy Commissioner, Günther Oettinger, has also re-cognised the need for change and has become an advocate of
restructuring the energy system to minimise CO2 emissions. But he needs our support. We all have to pool our efforts to ensure that Euro-pean decision-makers realise just how important renewable energies are in providing a sustainable supply of energy without radioactive waste or insecure CO2 storage systems. Looking back at the disap-pointing climate conference in Copenhagen, it is essential to under-stand this and realise that wind energy has to be recognised as a vital element in providing a solution to climate change issues, worldwide. By the year 2020, according to estimates provided by the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC), wind energy will be able cover 12 % of the energy consumption and save up to 1.5 billion tons of CO2 every year. So wind energy‘s key role in protecting the climate has to be further incorporated in the follow-up agreement to the Kyoto Protocol. And at the next climate conference in Bonn this summer, Chancellor Merkel will have the opportunity to pave the way for a binding agreement.
It is thus all the more crucial for us not be deluded by false information such as that renewables are the reason for rising electricity prices – despite the considerable drop in stock market prices for electrici-ty during the current financial crisis. Not only have the stock market
prices dropped, but also the Federal Network Agency has lowered the system usage rates in Germany – a considerable portion of the electri-city price – by up to 30 %. Normally this would mean that the price of electricity should decrease as well, especially since wind energy has a damping effect on the stock market price and has saved the economy billions in electricity costs. Studies indicate that in Germany alone this price-damping effect was already estimated at an annual rate of 5 billion Euros in 2006. And with increasing share of renewable power savings have been boosted even further. Now the aim is to ensure that these savings are actually passed on to the consumers. In the long run there will be no other alternative but to ensure power supply through renewables because with a forecasted world population of up to 12 billion people, resources will eventually become scarce.
During his visit to the small town of Estinnes in Wallonia, Belgium, the former EU Energy Commissioner, Piebalgs, was able to see for himself just how sophisticated onshore technology has become. The eleven E-126 turbines are providing clean energy for more than 150,000 people. At the inauguration ceremony of the giant turbines, guests were able to experience what onshore wind energy is capable of and discover that wind energy is not just the only chance for cur-bing energy costs but that it also has the power to do so.
Yours sincerely
Aloys WobbenManaging Director ENERCON GmbH
Transition to less CO2
emissions at affordable prices
4 WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 NEWS
WEC Tours: New factory for annual production of 200 towers
Construction on the concrete tower pro-
duction factory in Matane, Quebec is al-
ready well underway and the facilities spread
out over 15,000 square metres are due to
begin operations by the end of July. Besides
tower production, this new site also includes
E-module assembly, a service warehouse for
the Quebec region and administrative offices.
Due to spring weather conditions some sites
are often difficult to access for about four
weeks, so having large areas to store the
segments is essential. However, one way of
getting around the delivery access problem
and ensuring that the assembly teams can
still install the WECs, is to transport the tower
segments in advance to the sites during the
winter months while the ground is still frozen.
Further storage area is required for compo-
nents delivered from throughout Canada.
“We have been building our concrete towers
using basically the same principle for years.
This method has been reliable for our clima-
tic zone,” reports Norbert Hölscher, Managing
director of WEC Tours Québec. “But, for the
colder climates of Canada
we had to make some mo-
difications so that the tow-
ers can also be assembled
at sub-zero (C°) tempera-
tures. We are thus able to
avoid losing too much ins-
tallation time.”
“Our plans are to hire more
than 130 workers in Mata-
ne,” explains Hölscher. Re-
cruitment of personnel has
already begun. “We are still
looking for administrative
personnel and reinforced concrete workers.”
With the exception of blue collar workers, all
future employees, i.e. purchasers, foremen,
service and maintenance teams and payroll
accountants will be expected to spend 4-10
weeks in Germany for training.
The technical equipment is scheduled to be
installed in May and production will be laun-
ched by August. “Our specialists in Emden
have already performed preliminary tests on
the raw materials and were satisfied with
the results, which means that we should be
able to procure almost all the necessary ma-
terials locally.” Proximity to a harbour was
one of the reasons the facility planners cho-
se Matane. Hölscher: “From here, tower seg-
ments can be shipped quite far west along the
St. Lawrence River and across the Great Lakes.
In addition, Canadian rail service have large fa-
cilities and various possibilities of transporting
the components over this vast country.”
Matane: Concrete tower production under construction in December.
Since mid-December 2009, the first four
E-53 turbines have been up and running at
the “Mihai Viteazu” wind farm approx. 50 km
north of the Romanian harbour town of Con-
stanta. In 2010, a total of 35 of these turbines are
to be installed here and in neighbouring wind
farms. “With the first section of Mihai Viteazu,
ENERCON is the first manufacturer to have
installed and connected a wind farm compri-
sing of brand new wind turbines in Romania,”
announced ENERCON Sales Engineer Florian
Rohde happily. The reason being that, until
the end of 2008, only used wind turbines were
installed in the land between the Carpathians
and the Black Sea.
Andreas Blutke, Chief Executive of the Cons-
tanta based owners of the wind farm, Clean
Energy Development, was highly apprecia-
tive of the great cooperation with ENERCON.
“Without their hard efforts and great commit-
ment, the project wouldn‘t have been suc-
cessful!” Once completed the Mihai Viteazu
farm will contain 12 turbines and the Swiss
investors, Stream Invest Holding, have already
agreed three more projects in the vicinity. The-
se are in Biruinta, Pantelimon und Ciocarlia.
“After our first positive experience in Roma-
nia, we could imagine installing larger wind
farms at other locations closed to the Black
Sea‘s coast. There are still a lot of areas in
various regions which have an excellent wind
potential,” says Rohde. Offices for ENERCON’s
Service engineers looking after the wind farms
in the area have already been rented. And on
a long-term basis, Rohde thinks that installing
a volume of 30-50 2 MW turbines per year is
feasible.
Exploiting wind energy is still in its infancy in
Romania but since they are now a member
of the EU, the government is committed to
expanding renewable energies. So far, hydro
power has been the major source of renewa-
ble energy production. However, Romania has
been wanting to make headway in using its
wind resources for years now. A law that re-
gulates the remuneration of renewable energy
has been adopted only in November. So, the
projects in Constanta are just the first stepping
stone. After building the first E-53 wind farms
for Stream Invest the annual CO2 reduction will
be already up to 56 thousand tons.
First new wind farm in Romania
NEWS WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 5
Westray Development Trust (WDT) are
the winners of “The Best Community
Initiative Award” in 2009, a prize awarded by
Scottish Renewables, a forum
for Scotland’s Renewable Energy
Industry. The eight categories of
awards highlight and celebrate
the achievements of trailblazing
organisations in the renewables
field. WDT has installed a wholly
community owned E-44 turbine
on Westray, a north-western Or-
kney island. In the notification it
was stated that Westray com-
munity “is taking sustainability
to its heart and is ensuring that
initiatives, incentives and things
people can do are effectively communicated
to complete the objective.” The ceremony was
held at a formal dinner on 3rd December 2009
in Edinburgh, attended by approx. 700 people,
among them Henri Joppien, ENERCON sales
manager Great Britain. “The prize is looked on
as a high honour for the Trust and the people
on Westray”, commented Alasdair McVicar at
WDT. He also made acknowledgements on the
help received from the project partners, name-
ly: Community Energy Scotland, turbine manu-
facturer ENERCON, power purchaser Smartest
Energy, Triodos Bank and technical consultant
Colin Anderson. “The honour and practical be-
nefits of this award to local businesses and
tourism are well recognised”, McVihar added.
“With community ownership of the turbine, the
residents of Westray look on the award with
considerable pride and many take a personal
interest in the performance of the turbine.”
Westray community awarded Scottish renewable energy prize
At the ceremony: Henri Joppien, ENERCON, Steve Moore, Triodos Bank, Alasdair McVicar, WDT, and Lain Robertson, Smartest Energy.
Pict
ure:
Wes
tray
Deve
lopm
ent T
rust
Researchers from the universities of Hano-
ver and Erlangen conducted a study on
the flight behaviour of bats in the vicinity of 70
WECs in Germany. Depending on the regional
range of species present, there were large dif-
ferences in the probability of collisions with tur-
bines. In some parts of south-western Germa-
ny, e.g., it is the common pipistrelle that often
comes close to the rotors; in north-eastern Ger-
many, by contrast, there have been relatively
frequent sightings of the common noctule.
But the study also found that there are those
among the 25 species occurring in Germany
that do not look for their prey at heights where
wind turbine rotors are found: Mouse-eared
bats (genus Myotis), for example, do not dis-
play any activity at nacelle height. They hunt
very largely in the forest and rarely fly higher
than the tree tops.
ENERCON was the technical cooperation part-
ner in this study that was conducted in 2008
during an activity period from April to Novem-
ber. Using the SCADA system, the wind speeds
at nacelle height were tracked in parallel with
the acoustic recordings. As wind speeds in-
creased, smaller species such as the
common pipistrelle rarely travelled to
the height of the nacelle. Presumab-
ly they are too light to stay on course
during high winds. According to the
researchers, the data permits some
general conclusions.
One of them is: The stronger the wind,
the lower the risk of collisions. So far,
the researchers have not found any
conclusive evidence that an increased
risk for bats must be assumed for WEC
sites in forested areas. This matter is,
however, still under investigation; the
analyses have not yet been completed.
As far as methodology goes, the acoustic de-
tection systems installed in the nacelles have
proven their worth. Their results were mat-
ched successfully to high-resolution images
from thermographic cameras. The authors
also present a possible approach for taking the
presence of bat populations into account du-
ring the approval process for the construction
of wind energy converters. It involves deter-
mining which species occur in the vicinity of
the turbines, so that the collision risks can be
analysed in relation to time of day and season
as well as wind speed. This information can
then form the basis for the decision.
Dr. Robert Brinkmann and his colleagues pre-
sented their preliminary results during a con-
ference at Leibniz University in Hanover. A first
set of data is expected to be published in mid-
2010. The short versions of the presentations
with the most salient results of the study are
available from the Leibnitz University website.
Study: Bats and wind energy converters
Brown long-eared bats hunt close to the vegetation. Bat species with similar hunting behaviours are barely at risk from WECs.
Pict
ure:
Dr.
Robe
rt Br
inkm
ann
6 WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 T ITLE STORY
New additions to product portfolio
ENERCON joins the
3 MW class
ENERCON intends to use these new turbines in the 2.3 and 3 MW classes to satisfy the growing demand for wind turbines in this
capacity range. Market studies indicate that in Europe alone, there is potential for installing roughly another 80 gigawatts of wind energy power till 2013. “This potential can be exploited to a large degree by machines in the 3 MW class,” says ENERCON Sales Director Stefan Lütkemeyer.
Among the new turbine types, the technology of the E-82/2.3 MW is most closely related to the existing E-82/2.0 MW model. With the same rotor diameter and tower height (between 78 and 138 metres), it can achieve a yield increase of 3 to 6 percent – depending on the wind speed – at the same location. “We‘ve improved the design of the cast iron components in the nacelle and optimised the air cooling system,” explains Arno Hildebrand, Engineering Manager at Wobben Research & Development (WRD).
E-82/3 MW: Top yields for wind class IA
The previously used stator support star of the generator has been replaced with a stator shield that is shaped in such a way as to pro-tect the generator mechanically and to allow further components to be fitted directly to it. In contrast to the E-82/2.3 MW, the E-82/3 MW is also suitable for locations where average wind speeds exceed 8.5 m/s (at hub height). In addition, the generator is somewhat longer than the one in the E-82/2.3 MW. For installations of this wind turbine at wind class IEC IA sites, 85-metre tubular steel towers are used. For wind class IIA sites, the typical ENERCON precast concrete towers (78 to 138 m hub height) are available.
The installation of the E-82/3 MW prototype will begin in January; series manufacturing is scheduled to start towards the end of the year. Power curve calculations for the E-82/3 MW indicate a yield increase of 15 to 20 percent compared to the E-82/2.0 MW – for
ENERCON is currently expanding its product range by introducing the E-82/2.3 MW and the E-82/3 MW –
advanced models based on the E-82/2.0 MW – as well as the newly developed E-101 model, another 3 MW
machine. The E-82/3 MW is suited to wind class IA and IIA locations. The E-101 has been specially designed
for locations rated up to wind class IEC IIA. The prototype of the 2.3 MW machine has been running since Fe-
bruary 2009 at a site in Fiebing in north-western Germany; the remaining prototypes will be installed this year.
Since February 2009, the first E-82/2.3 MW is turning in Lower Saxony.
TITLE STORY WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 7
Building on tried-and-tested E-82 technology
“In designing the E-101, we‘ve based ourselves mostly on E-82 tech-nology,” says Hildebrand. The E-82 is currently ENERCON‘s most-produced model. Crucial features such as component size as well as transport and manufacturing dimensions of the new model have been based on those of the E-82. The diameter of the generator has not changed, which means that established standards for transport and manufacturing can remain in place. The load-bearing components have been reinforced, however, because the rotor area of the E-101 is 1.5 times larger than that of the E-82. Consequently, the machine is subject to stronger forces acting upon it.
The E-101 WEC is available with precast concrete towers only, hub heights are 99 or 135 metres. It is designed as a wind class IIA ma-chine, but is also suitable for locations with less intensive wind pat-terns. At comparable sites, it achieves 1.5 times the yield of a 2 MW machine.
Study of the E-82/3 MW.
wind speeds above 8.5 m/s. The higher the wind speed, the larger the difference.
3 MW turbines run with water cooling systems
The E-82/3 MW and E-101/3 MW are fitted with water cooling sys-tems. “This is not really new territory for us,” explains Hildebrand. ENERCON has already used this type of cooling system in more than 150 machines of type E-82 – and achieved an increase in rated pow-er. “Our experience has been positive. The system works very well.” In contrast to the E-82/2.0 MW, however, the cooling fins are no lon-ger installed on the roof of the nacelle where they would be very noticeable; they are now built into the casing. Water cooling systems have been common in other areas of machine engineering for a long time. They have proven their worth in many diverse areas of appli-cation during decades of use. For example, steam locomotives from around the turn of the 20th century had cooling units of a similar shape as those now found in new ENERCON wind energy converters. The use of stainless steels makes sure that the water pipes retain their cooling properties even after 20 years of use. Separate monito-ring instruments watch the cooling system constantly. “The operating system detects any changes immediately and reacts accordingly,” explains the WRD design engineer.
The names of the wind classes used in this article correspond to the established standards set by the International Electrotechnical Com-mission (IEC). The names use Roman numerals from I to IV that refer to average wind speed (I < 10 m/s, II < 8.5 m/s, III < 7.5 m/s, IV < 6 m/s) as well as 50-year extreme values. The appended letters A-C desi-gnate turbulence classes. “A” indicates high turbulence (< 18 % at15 m/s wind speed), “B” medium turbulence, and “C” low turbulence.
IEC wind classes
E-101 wind turbine; prototype installation will start in mid-2010.
8 WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 FORUM
ENERCON impresses financial
partners and customers
Viana do Castelo
In early November 2009, ENERCON invited customers and financial partners to the Castelo Santiago da Barra
in Viana do Castelo, Portugal. “This forum serves as an information platform for our international financial
partners and customers. We would like to present an overview of our most recent advances in technology,
and our company‘s financial strength and future markets,” said ENERCON Managing Director Hans-Dieter
Kettwig. More than 150 participants from around the world were witness to the first public presentation of
the new 3 MW class by the Aurich-based manufacturer.
ENERCON is your dependable partner in the wind industry – this has been true for the last 25 years, and will continue to be true in the
future,” said Hans-Dieter Kettwig at the forum. He underpinned this statement with company data proving the performance and reliability of the wind turbine manufacturer. For example, out of the 3.2 GW of installed power planned for 2009, 2.5 GW had already been realised by the end of September. “This shows that this year as in previous years, we are living up to our forecasts,” said Kettwig. After the pre-vious year‘s great leap (+27 %), corporate performance increased moderately in 2009. Mr. Kettwig analysed the individual markets to demonstrate that, financial crisis notwithstanding, ENERCON maintai-ned the installation levels of the previous years in many European countries and even exceeded them in some, such as Germany, Cana-da, Belgium, Italy, Sweden, and Turkey. He was however critical of cur-
rent developments in Spain where the cap on feed-in tariffs for wind electricity from new turbines introduced in May 2009 as well as the public discussion about the prolongation of this limitation are creating massive insecurity among investors and manufacturers. “Spain finally needs to clear matters up. Only then can the wind energy sector con-tinue to evolve in that country.”
Mr. Kettwig pointed out that ENERCON‘s high equity share was a cru-cial security factor that enabled the company to remain independent and to continue its secure and solid growth. “And this is of course a benefit to our customers and their financial partners.” In addition, the comprehensive provisions covering services under the EPK mainte-nance contracts (ENERCON PartnerKonzept) add an important layer of security.
Visiting the mechatronics plant; Tiago Santos, Diogo Monteiro (both BANIF) and Rita Cayolla Ribeiro (Barclays) at the Bustavade wind farm, part of Alto Minho project (240 MW).
FORUM WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 9
When it comes to investments, ENERCON is equally guided by its goals of independence, reliability, and innovation. “By now, our investments have reached figures in the 3-digit million euro range per year,” re-ported Kettwig. “Over the coming years, ENERCON will continue to invest in its renowned vertical integration and industrial manufactu-ring of WEC components and logistics.” Banks who have supported ENERCON projects range from the German state-owned regional banks (HSH Nordbank, Nord LB, Landesbank Saar, Bayerische Lan-desbank) via BNP Paribas, La Caixa, and Commerzbank to Fortis, Co-operative Bank, Rabobank, and Triodos. Mr. Kettwig thanked the attending representatives of these banks for the trust placed inENERCON and the good cooperation.
Participants could witness the success of ENERCON‘s investment in Portugal with their own eyes. In small groups, they visited the tower and rotor blade manufacturing plants in the harbour of Viana do Cas-telo as well as the mechatronics plant, and generator and E-module production facilities in nearby Lanheses. The participants‘ response was positive. “ENERCON manages to transfer and replicate the know-how and quality of its German factories without losing anything in the process,” says Rudolf Klumpp, responsible for the financing of energy projects at HSH Nordbank. “Whether you look at an ENERCON factory in Magdeburg in Germany, or Viana do Castelo in Portugal: You see the same highly-motivated staff and efficient structures everywhere.”
Speaking at the forum, ENERCON Sales Director Stefan Lütkemeyer said that the financial crisis and growing competition were currently the greatest challenges facing the wind energy market. “Wind energy has changed from a seller‘s market to a ‘normal’ market.” ENERCON‘s response is to continue the development of its gearless technology, creating machines with few moving parts which minimises mainte-nance cost and guarantees high availability. Latest achievements in-clude the evolution of the E-82/2.0 MW into the E-82/2.3 MW and the
E-82/3 MW. The latter, equipped with a modified generator, will be in-stalled for the first time this year. Series production will start in the fourth quarter. In addition, Lütkemeyer presented the E-101/3 MW, a prototype of which will be installed in the summer. “Our model calculations for WECs with 1 0 0 - m e t r e d i a m e t e r s have shown that the E-101 – given a wind speed of 6.5 m/s at a height of 100 metres – achieves a significantly higher yield compared to similar machines by other manufacturers.” ENERCON is confident that its product portfolio has well-equipped the company for the future. Lütkemeyer referred to a study published by BTM Consult that indicates a potential of 220 GW of new wind energy installations worldwide until the year 2013. “We want to increase our market share.” However, customer satisfaction remains key, he added – quality will never be compromised.
150 participants attended the forum, some coming from as far away as Canada and Japan. One of them was Joachim Uecker, Managing Director of Energiequelle, a company that plans and operates renewa-ble power plants. “I was particularly impressed by the Alto Minho wind farm. The site, which is located at an altitude of 800 metres, proves that it is possible to successfully realise good and economically sound projects even under difficult geographical conditions.”
At the forum; ENERCONPOR Managing Director F. Laranjeira, ENERCON Chief Production Manager K. Peters, ENERCON Managing Directors H.-D. Kettwig and A. Wobben.
Visiting the rotor blade factory in Viana do Castelo.
10 WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 TECHNOLOGY
E-126 turns into
7.5 MW turbine
Multi-megawatt class
Installation of E-126
The modified E-126 is now suitable not only for IEC wind class I si-tes with turbulence class C, but also for wind classes IA and IB. To
achieve this, some minor modifications were made. For example, the machine design was adapted to load assumptions for locations with stronger turbulence. In addition, the generator cooling system was optimised. The ventilation fans of ENERCON wind energy converters are built into the nacelle casing. The air intake has been modified in such a way that the cooling capacity can be exploited more efficiently. “We have tried and proven that we can operate the E-126 safely and
with the required reserves even at 7.5 MW rated power,” explains Arno Hildebrand, Head of Construction Department at Wobben Re-search & Development in Aurich. A monitoring system supports the control system of the wind turbine. “Depending on the location, the WEC control system assesses the loads that occur and mitigates any extremes, for example by pitching the rotor blades or turning the na-celle,” says Hildebrand.
So far, the rated power of the E-126 was 6 MW.
However, ENERCON‘s R&D organisation – Wobben
Research & Development (WRD) in Aurich – has
revaluated the performance of this turbine type
above the 6 MW mark. Result: With just a few modi-
fications, the E-126 is now able to operate safely at
7.5 MW rated power.
E-126/6 MW in Hamburg-Altenwerder.
In late November, ENERCON installation teams for the first time used the new, ENERCON-owned Terex Demag CC 9800 large-scale crane
to hoist an E-126 hub near Emden, Germany. The crane fully proved its worth and accomplished some truly heavy-duty work. The hub with the pre-assembled inner blade segments weighs in at 340 tons. At the working radius required to hoist the hub, the Terex-Demag has a maximum lifting capacity of 360 t.
Rigging the hub took five hours alone; lifting it off the centre frame ano-ther hour. A smaller crane took care of guiding the hub, making sure the downward-pointing rotor blade did not touch the ground when the hub was tilted. The hoisting itself was completed in 20 minutes. The installation team then spent the remainder of their work day inside the nacelle, bolting rotor and machine house. Project manager Sonja Kehmeier is proud that the entire installation process could be com-pleted in just 2.5 months, from tower construction to the mounting of the blades. “Because the end of the year was close, we were working
to a tight deadline: The teams worked in parallel, buil-ding the tower, pre-assembling the hub, and pre-paring the ground equipment for the crane on a dedi-cated hardstand.” This WEC is the first E-126 in the fleet of the Stadt-werke Emden (SWE) utility. SWE Managing Director Remmer Edzards emphasised that the E-126 with its estimated yield of 20 million kWh will significantly contribute to an efficient power supply to the city; and its goal of going 100 % regenerative.
First deployment of ENERCON‘s new giant crane
Shortly before hoisting: Rotor hub rigged to the crane.
INTERNATIONAL WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 11
E-70 turbine No. 100
installed in Taiwan
ENERCON East Asia
All the ENERCON WECs on Taiwan are wind class I. They are desig-ned for a surviving wind speed of 70 m/s and an annual average
wind speed of 10 m/s. And this is needed. During the windy winter season it is not unusual to see the WECs producing at rated power day in and day out.
In the installation season during summer, the assembly sometimes has to be stopped for several days, while typhoons with wind speed above 60 m/s are passing. This also happened during installation of turbine number 100 in summer last year. “Normally, such typhoons have no influence on the work in progress other than the missed days,” explains Jørn Kristensen, ENERCON Sales Manager for East Asia. The reason is that the WECs and materials on the ground as well as in the harbour are extraordinarily secured and lashed to the ground. But a strong typhoon last August was extremely wet and gave an excessive amount of rain, Kristensen reports. “This caused a lot of flooding, and several people were killed in the mountains and the rivers. Even large highway bridges were washed away and prevented the transportation of towers to the sites for several weeks.”
ENERCON installed the first WECs in Taiwan in 1991/1992. These were four E-40/600 kW WECs supplied to the state owned power company Taiwan Power Company (TPC) and installed on Penghu Island. Later, this project was extended with additional four 600 kW machines. Both projects were done in close cooperation with Chung-Hsin Electric & Machinery Mfg. Corp. (CHEM). Together, CHEM and ENERCON also won contracts for six E-44/900 kW and twelve E-70/2.3 MW turbines to be supplied to TPC this year. The E-44 are presently under construction on Penghu Island, and the E-70 on the west coast of the main island: two at the Datan Power station and ten at Wang-Kong south of Taichung.
In 2005, ENERCON installed the first project of E-70 for an Inde-pendent Power Producer (IPP) – a 25 turbine project developed by InfraVest Wind Power Group, an affiliate of a German developer of the same name. This turned out to be the first in a number of projects for this developer. E-70 number 100 is included in the 5th InfraVest pro-ject. In addition, during 2009 ENERCON installed an 11.5 MW project for Lung-Kang Wind Power Corporation on the west coast. The project
consists of 5 E-70/2.3 MW turbines and is developed and owned by the large industrial group Tung-Ho Steel Enterprise Corp.
All the time and for all pro-jects, ENERCON has co-operated with Giant, Taipei, for inland transportation and cranes for the instal-lation. Quite a significant part of special equipment is requested for transpor-tation, and Giant made this investment from the start of the first project. Foun-dation sections and towers are purchased locally from large steel manufacturing companies.
This has involved an im-portant transfer of quality assurance requirements and paint systems for the towers. Until now, the to-wers have been manu-factured and supplied by China Steel Machinery Corporation (CSMC). “Also for the years to come, ENERCON is expected to be one of the leading sup-pliers to the Taiwanese market. The government has a policy to install wind energy. The players in the market are power company TPC and a number of developers like InfraVest and Tung-ho for IPP,” Kristensen states.
During the windy season in December last year, ENERCON installed the E-70 number 100 in Taiwan.The turbi-
ne is included in the fifth project developed by a Taiwanese affiliate of the German InfraVest.
Representatives of customer, developer and executive companies cutting a jubilee cake.
Float of balloons in honour of the celebrated.
The first E-33 on New Zealand‘s Scott Base in Antarctica took up operation on 2 December 2009. On that day, it fed the first elec-
tricity from a regenerative source into the grid on Ross Island; previ-ously, the island depended entirely on diesel-generated power. In the future, the wind farm with its three ENERCON wind energy converters will cover a significant portion of the electricity requirements of the island where up to 1350 people live during the summer. Previously, 4.5 million litres of diesel were burned for this purpose every year.
“This is the southernmost wind farm in the world,” comments an enthusiastic Scott Bennett, project manager with Meridian Energy, a utility company headquartered in Wellington. Before this, the two E-30 turbines at Australia‘s Mawson Station in Antarctica were con-sidered the southernmost in the world. “The commissioning of the first turbine on Ross Island turned into a real struggle between man and machine,” reports Bennett. At about 10 o‘clock at night, the fine-
tuning of the equipment was finally complete; the turbine then went on to produce electricity through the rest of night. The first E-33, says the Meridian engineer, has set a “widely visible sign that renewable energies have arrived on Ross Island”. Located on a high plateau on Crater Hill, a volcanic mountain lying between the US American McMurdo Station and New Zealand‘s Scott Base, the wind farm can easily be observed from both stations. “The residents watch very at-tentively as the rotors turn,” says Bennett.
While the first of the turbines on Crater Hill was being commissioned, the installation of WECs number two and three was progressing at a brisk pace. The four-man installation team was able to draw on the experience gained while working on the first WEC. “We are making much faster progress now,” reports Andrea von Lindeiner, ENERCON‘s sales representative for Australia and New Zealand. Among the par-ticular features of the Ross Island project are the foundation spiders
Three E-33 turbines supply
Scott Base & McMurdo Station
Renewables in Antarctica
On 16 January, New Zealand‘s Minister of Foreign Affairs Murray McCully and US Ambassador David Huebner
inaugurated three E-33 turbines on Ross Island through a live link from Auckland to Antarctica. Since Decem-
ber, the wind farm has been supplying New Zealand‘s and US research stations on Ross Island with electrici-
ty. The installation was carried out by ENERCON in cooperation with Wellington-based Meridian Energy.
The first wind energy converter on Ross Island, one out of three E-33, has been running since 2 December 2009.
EWEC 2010
(Warsaw/Poland)
European wind energy conference & exhibition
20 – 23 April 2010
www.ewec2010.info
ENERGY at Hanover Fair 2010
(Hanover/Germany)
Technology tradeshow for the energy mix of the future
19 – 23 April 2010
www.hannovermesse.de
All Energy 2010
(Aberdeen/Scotland)
Renewable energy exhibition & conference
19 – 20 May 2010
www.all-energy.co.uk
ICCI 2010
(Istanbul/Turkey)
International fair for energy and the environment
12 – 14 May 2010
www.icci.com.tr
Sireme 2010
(Paris/France)
Exhibition for renewable energy & energy management
9 – 11 June 2010
www.sireme.fr
2nd Day of the wind industry in Bavaria
(Fürth/Germany)
BWE-organised meeting for suppliers, planners & operators
17 March 2010
www.wind-energie.de INFO
-SE
RV
ICE
Grid connection expert Andree Laurien connecting the pitch motor for the blades.
Tower construction for the “world‘s most southern wind energy converter”.
that anchor the WECs to the ground. Conventional foundations would not set properly because of the cold conditions. Hence, steel structu-res with precast concrete feet were designed and manufactured by a Wellington-based construction company. “We were very happy when we found that the flange of the foundation steel spider fitted with the bottom flange of the tower despite the fact that these two compo-nents had been designed and built on opposite sides of the earth,” says Sebastian Kunze, installation technician with ENERCON Support.
On 1 December 2009, the rotor and rotor blades for WEC number two were hoisted and installed. The installation progress was not least due to a change in weather bringing relatively mild temperatures, fog, and calm conditions. Turbine number two was plugged into the grid in mid-December, turbine number three in January.
“The wind has been interrupting installation constantly,” says Kunze‘s colleague at ENERCON Support, installation technician Andree Lau-rien, who has been working on Ross Island since early November. Wind speeds of more than 40 m/s are not uncommon. On some days, they worked while outside temperatures ranged from -13 to -18 degrees Celsius. With the added wind chill, these temperatures felt colder than -20 degrees. “Cold like that creeps through your jacket in no time.” The WECs had already been delivered to the site in the previous year. All components made it through the storage period un-harmed, but snow managed to get into one of the 40-foot containers. “I worked for three days, carefully removing the snow with a spade, until I was able to recover all parts.”
Laurien and Kunze felt comfortable on Scott Base; the station‘s resi-dents (84 in December) have made them feel very welcome. On their free Sundays, excursions to outlying posts for research projects provi-ded some recreation. “There is a spirit of helpfulness and talent for im-provisation among the residents that help coping with the challenges. Once I needed a 4-ohm resistor, and got an old porcelain one from the materials store of McMurdo. At first, I was sceptical, but it worked.”
INTERNATIONAL WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 13
Pcitu
re: M
erid
ian
Ener
gy
A new benchmark for site
practices
Bear Mountain Project, Canada
Last autumn, ENERCON completed the installation of the Bear Mountain project in the province of British
Columbia, Canada. The wind farm has a total rated power of 102 MW and is the first one to connect to the grid
in British Columbia, says wind farm owner AltaGas. Thanks to the stable south-westerly wind currents, 34 wind
energy converters spaced at 160-metre intervals could be realised at this site. At the same time, the location
atop a long, narrow mountain ridge demanded some unusual modifications to standard installation practices.
Bear Mountain has been installed more quickly than any other pro-ject I‘ve ever seen,“ says ENERCON civil engineer Nils Wingert
who is based in Lethridge, Alberta. The wind farm is located 15 kilo-metres south-west of the town of Dawson Creek in western Canada. Due to the limited space on the ridge of the mountain range and the steady brisk winds, single-blade installation had to be used for all 34 turbines. A narrow-track crawler crane proved to be of invalua-ble help during installation. At only four metres, its track width was
not even half that of the second, conventional crane. “After finishing work on one turbine, this crane could overtake the other crane and be ready at the next available tower within half a day,” explains Wingert. Setting up and dismantling the conventional crawler crane, on the other hand, took the teams two days at some sites. The conventional and the narrow-track crane were working in parallel on all installati-on tasks from tower construction to single-blade installation. At the temporary storage area, small mobile cranes supported the teams
Mobile 250 t telescopic crane assisting single blade installation (foreground) and conventional crawler crane lifting machine house on Bear Mountain Ridge.
with the pre-assembly work such as mounting trailing edge sections to rotor blades. “We used the just-in-time approach to deliver rotor blades and machine houses to the individual sites,” says Wingert. His co-worker, site manager Jens Trappmann from ENERCON Internatio-nal Support, had tested such a central pre-assembly area for the first time during a wind farm project in Eemshaven in the Netherlands in 2008. He had to make some adjustments to account for the diffe-rent conditions on Bear Mountain Ridge. “Even though we were doing single-blade installation, the wind did pose problems. Frequently, the wind speed would be just above the permissible limit,” says Wingert. Once other installation work was complete, the narrow-track crane was therefore also used for blade installation because it was able to continue installation work at slightly stronger winds.
In total, one pre-assembly, two installation and two blade installation teams were at work on Bear Mountain. Each team consisted of two specialists from ENERCON Support, flown in from the German head-quarters, and six to eight Canadian technicians. “ENERCON is cur-rently setting up permanent installation teams in Canada. The people working here at Bear Mountain have really proven their worth. Service in Canada could definitely also use them for the long term.” In addi-tion, a number of Canadian contractors could establish themselves, such as crane company Eagle West Wind Energy, Formula Contrac-tors for foundations, and transport company Salco Energy Services.
The project was originally launched by the Peace Energy Cooperati-ve in Dawson Creek, a local renewable energies initiative with 400 members. It owned the exclusive rights to develop a commercial wind farm in the midst of the local Bear Mountain recreational area (offe-ring skiing, hiking, and ATV riding). For this purpose, the cooperative partnered with Aeolis Wind Power Corporation based in Sydney on Vancouver Island who developed the wind farm further. In 2006 Bri-tish Columbia Hydro, the province‘s utility company and grid operator, awarded three contracts for elec-tricity feed-in from wind farm pro-jects in the region: One of them went to the Bear Mountain project.
During the development of other wind farms in British Columbia, Aeolis had previously cooperated with the AltaGas Income Trust which specialises in the development and operation of energy generation systems of all kinds. “In 2007, we acquired the entire project from Aeolis and the Peace Energy Cooperative,” says AltaGas company spokesperson Adrianne Lovric. “Based on their early partnership in this project, Aeolis and the Peace Energy Cooperative receive annual royalties from the proceeds once the wind farm is operational.” Bear
Mountain is AltaGas‘ first wind farm. “Our commitment to renewable energy is driven by market demand for clean energy,” explains Lovric. Its high average wind speeds of 7.6 to 8.2 m/s at hub height (78 metres) and its proximity to the existing grid infrastructure make Bear Mountain the ideal location for a wind farm, says AltaGas. The construction of the 34 E-82 turbines on Bear Mountain Range has been accompanied by an extensive environmental monitoring pro-gramme that continues through the turbines‘ first years of operation.
Aspects such as geology, hydrology, and water quality as well as the de-velopment of wildlife populations (such as the impact on bats) and vegetation are assessed by scien-tific experts, reports AltaGas. The monitoring programme is sche-duled to conclude about three years after the commissioning of the wind farm. While construction was under way, a large area around the site was closed off for safety reasons. Shortly after the wind farm was commissioned, strollers, hikers, and skiers returned to the moun-tain tops of Bear Mountain Range, reports ENERCON project manager
Nils Wingert. The entire area except for the fenced-off lots immediately surrounding the wind turbines is once again accessible to the public.
AltaGas is going to put up information boards about the project inside the wind farm and will additionally partner with an outreach/interpre-tive centre in the city of Dawson Creek to offer off-site interpretive information on the wind farm.
INTERNATIONAL WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 15
Bear Mountain wind farm after commissioning in October 2009.
Relocating the narrow track crawler crane.
Pcitu
re: A
ltaGa
s
Placing
the large
components
This January, installation team 23 is working in the town of Sögel in the north-western German region of Emsland. Since November
eight men under the supervision of team leader Kevin Alfs, 21, have been installing E-82 wind turbines owned by the Norderland wind en-gineering company all around the 6,000-inhabitant town. Today, they will hoist the rotor hub for the 5th out of a total of seven new turbines in this wind farm. On the ground, four technicians are busy preparing the hub: They attach the spinner cap to the rotor hub that is already rigged to the crane hook, and seal the joints. “We make sure to com-plete as many steps as possible on the ground, because once at the top, doing the same task usually takes a lot more effort,” explains Alfs. Temperatures are just above freezing. But winds are light and favourable for hoisting the hub. The morning fog has lifted, allowing the crane operator a clear view of the machine house that is about 100 metres above the ground.
Concentration and precision required
In the machine house, the other half of the team is preparing for the placement of the hub. Daniel Sebbel, 27, is in charge of maintaining radio contact with his team leader and the crane operator. The men use the “waiting time” until the hub is finally hoisted to clean the na-celle, mount casing sections, and complete some last preparation
Service installation technician
Worldwide, more than 50 teams of installation tech-
nicians set up wind energy converters for ENERCON
and its customers. Their tasks range from preparing
the final steel section for hoisting onto the precast
concrete tower, to installing machine house, genera-
tor, and rotor hub, assisting the grid connection team
e.g. by hoisting cables inside steel towers. Service is
currently looking for technicians to join installation
teams in Sweden, France, Turkey, Canada, the UK,
and Ireland. The German Service companies, too,
have vacancies for technicians, team leaders, and
construction site supervisors.
16 WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 JOB PROFILE
Daniel Sebbel guiding the hub on the final centimetres of its approach.
Tightening bolts to torque.
Team leader Kevin Alfs (left) and a co-worker preparing the hub for hoisting.
The Service companies for ENERCON WECs in Sweden, France, Canada, the UK, and
Ireland are currently looking for installation technicians. Teams consist of eight to ten
workers. They are responsible for all installation stages from hoisting the topmost steel
sections for precast concrete towers to the installation of generator and rotor hub. Each
team works on installation projects in its own country. In Germany, assignments are
typically limited to the regional base of each team: However, assignments in neighbou-
ring Service regions as well as abroad in partnering countries are possible.
Service installation technician job profile
Key qualifications:
Vocational training in mechanical
enginee ring
Enthusiasm for wind energy; physical
fitness; ability to work at heights
Tasks and responsibilities:
Installation of WEC components on
top of the tower
Advantages:
+ Varied tasks and responsibilities per-
taining to WEC installation
+ Practical introduction to all aspects of
the job
+ Highest standards of safety
+ Career opportunities within the
Servi ce organisation
JOB PROFILE WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 17
tasks such as arranging bolts and tools and adjusting the torque on the hydraulic wrench. Just before the hub is level with the nacelle, one man steps into the front part of the generator to coordinate guiding the axle pin and hub into the exact position. Meanwhile, Sebbel and tech-nicians Pattrick Widuck, 23, and Benjamin Braun, 27, are keeping an eye on the hub. Sebbel tells the crane operator how far to move the jib and how much to lower the crane rope. “Guiding the hub into place is always an exciting moment: You really have to concentrate and work very precisely,” says Sebbel. Once the last few millimetres have been negotiated and the hub has made contact, the nuts are screwed onto the threaded bolts. Benjamin Braun climbs into the spinner to adjust and secure the shrunk-on-disc rotor onto the generator.
“The team up there still has a couple of hours of work left,” says Alfs who coordinates the hoisting of the hub from the ground. After pre-assembly is complete, the placing of the topmost steel tower section and of the na-celle components without blades takes about two days for the E-82, but due to the current weather conditions, the team usually needs a little longer, ex plains Alfs. The qualified industrial machine mechanic from the western Münsterland region has been with team 23, which be-longs to Service company Service Mitte GmbH, since February 2009. After his initial training, experienced co-workers from Service North-West headquarters in Aurich provided additional guidance until he was ready to take over the team leader role in August. “The co-workers from headquarters gradually returned to their original teams. Their place was filled by new, young, and highly motivated individuals from our home region who have grown into a great team,” says Alfs.
Hoisting of the rotor hub has begun.
The young team leader received his vocational training in a textile ma-chine engineering company in Coesfeld. After successfully completing his apprenticeship, he found that working permanently in the same place was not what he wanted to do. “I wanted to get out.” At the job centre, he was told about a job opening that was out of the ordinary. “It was the first time I‘d ever heard about ENERCON.” He did a 2-day work trial with Service Mitte‘s mechanical maintenance team. “That‘s when I realised how much I enjoy working outside and at height.”
“No two construction sites are alike!”
WEC installation does not involve the same level of craftsmanship as machine engineering, says Alfs. But there‘s always something new going on. The dependency on the weather as well as the different soil types and access conditions means that no two construction sites are ever alike. “We lift heavy components into great heights. It requires excellent teamwork to move each part into its proper spot smoothly, and it‘s a great feeling every time we accomplish this.”
“For this kind of work, you really need to be a team player”, agrees Alfs‘ co-worker Hans Overkämping, 33. If the weather is good, 10 to 12-hour working days are the norm. In addition, the team is living on the road because 95 percent of their construction sites are located more than one hour away from the team‘s central store in Dülmen. “That means we have to spend our weeknights in hotels,” says the former motorcycle mechanic. A good team spirit is crucial as well as a good sense of humour for maintaining concentration under the high pressure of long installation jobs. “It works best when we all pull our weight.” In Sögel, team 23 still has two E-82 turbines to install. In a few weeks, their next assignment will be a site near the bigger city of Münster. Overkämping is looking forward to their free evenings spent together in the city. “We enjoy going bowling together.”
18 WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 INTERNATIONAL
Connectors and seawater-proof
housings for the wind industry
Plug connectors are used in many areas: Robot design, transpor-tation, telecommunication, and classical machine engineering. In
ENERCON WECs, from the very start they have been used wherever possible to replace the traditional terminals in the wiring of energy converters. “Plug connectors save material and installation costs,” says Jens Grunwald, Sales Manager with Harting Germany. The con-tacts of the plug connectors are integrated into support/mounting frames. Fitting these frames onto standardised support rails is quick and low maintenance. This approach supports the modularisation of connection elements in electrical cabinets. “Modular systems can be pre-assembled and tested separately,” adds Grunwald.
“Even back in the day when ENERCON was building the E-15, we recognised that it makes sense to use a plug-in design for electrical assemblies and functional units instead of hardwiring them,” says
Ulrich Neundlinger, Managing Director of Elektric Schaltanlagenferti-gung in Aurich. As time went by, the use of these parts was extended to more and more areas.
Largest employer in town
Harting‘s company headquarters are located in the centre of Espel-kamp, a town with 25,000 inhabitants in the North-East of the Ger-man state of North Rhine-Westphalia. The headquarters house the research and development department with a staff of 400, as well as production lines in the areas of electrical and electronic connection and network technology. The company premises as well as the neigh-bouring residential streets are lined with trees. Espelkamp is famous for its abundant green spaces. After World War II, many refugees from the formerly German territories in eastern Europe found shelter here;
Harting Technology Group
For 25 years, the Harting group based in Espelkamp, a town in the German region of Eastern Westphalia, has
been supplying plug connectors for ENERCON wind energy converters. The meticulous workmanship as well as
the high quality of materials used – e.g. highly weatherproof coatings on plug housings, and gold-plated plug
connector contacts – ensure the long service life of Harting‘s products. The manufacturer‘s particular strength
is to take on and solve design challenges, and bring new products to maturity for series manufacturing.
Harting sales manager Jens Grunwald, who established the contact with ENERCON in 1985, holding a Harting plug connector on a blade relay box.
SUPPLIER WINDBLATT 01 | 2010 19
within a few years, this gave rise to a large available workforce for the industrial reconstruction. In 1950, the family-owned Harting business moved here from Minden, the capital city of the district. At that time, Harting produced electric irons, cattle fence devices and low-watta-ge light bulbs. Since then, the electrics manufacturer has made its mark on the town. There are five production facilities, and with a staff of about 1,600 people, the company is the largest local employer. Harting still uses old refugee camp buildings for administration, a cafeteria, and a modern test lab.
In the 1950s, Harting started manufacturing electrical cigarette ven-ding machines and jukeboxes. At the same time, the company began to specialise in plug connector technology. With the Han connectors, Harting created a worldwide industry standard. Around the turn of the millennium, the product range was enlarged significantly by adding industrial-strength solutions in Ethernet technology and intelligent opto-electrical plug connectors such as fibre-optic cables for WEC communication, as well as systems for flexible energy application.After the demand for cigarette vending machines declined, Harting switched to using the now available capacities (metal punching presses, painting machines, etc.) for the production of weatherproof housings for the wind industry. And so today, Harting workers punch, weld, paint, test, and assemble stainless steel housings for battery control systems, low-voltage electrical cabinets, rotor sub-distributi-on systems, and nacelle control cabinets. “Wind energy is an impor-tant market for us, and ENERCON a top customer,” says Grunwald.
Trademark black surface coating
“Harting is a highly innovative company that sees the bigger pic-ture,” emphasises Neundlinger. The manufacturer was often willing to add new modules to their product range that had previously been outside their core offering. E.g., Harting responded to ENERCON‘s need for seawater-proof connectors by developing corrosion-re-sistant housings with a black surface powder coating. Today, these are a trademark feature of all power cabinets and supply units thatENERCON ships overseas. Harting also made a substantial contributi-on to the development of plug connectors for high amperage currents (>100 A) in ENERCON WECs.
Among the ongoing joint projects is an LED lighting system for WEC towers. ENERCON designed the cable architecture; Harting provided its plug connector know-how and supplied the housing blanks for the LED lights made by manufacturer Trade Wind Energy. “We used to use flu-orescent tubes inside the towers of ENERCON turbines,” says Thomas Bürger from the Special Components team at Elektric Schaltanlagen-fertigung. The old system relied on a decentralised emergency power supply: a rechargeable battery for each fluorescent tube. By contrast, the LED system has a central power supply unit located in the base of the tower. If the power supply fails, Service technicians only need to replace one single battery. “This makes work a lot easier for our tech-nicians,” explains Bürger.
Welding a housing for a rotor sub-distribution system.
Testing a plug connector for a fibre-optic cable.
Inserting Harting plug connectors into an E-82 nacelle control cabinet.
WINDBLATT
Wind energy to play crucial role in
international climate agreement
Rémi Gruet
Windblatt: Within the next decade, CO2 emissions have to be reducedconsiderably worldwide, if we want to prevent a temperature in-crease of more than 2° C. Electricity generation will play a crucial role for this goal. What can wind energy contribute to the global efforts to resolve the CO2 problem?Rémi Gruet: More than just electricity, it helps to address climate change. In a joint effort, GWEC and EWEA have looked at wind de-velopment scenarios up to 2020, in Europe and globally. A projected capacity of 230 GW in the EU and more than 1,000 GW worldwide would help reduce the EU’s emission reduction target set for 2020 by 33 % and between 42 % and 65 % of the commitments indus-trialised countries are willing to take as part of a climate agreement. This shows both that wind is developing very rapidly and that it can be a major contributor to emission reductions by 2020, unlike other suggested technologies.
Windblatt: The current agreement on climate change offers developing countries possibilities to reduce emissions with the help of interna-tional funding, in particular the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM). Which role does wind energy play in the use of these mechanisms?Gruet: At the end of 2009, wind accounted for 17 % of the projects registered as CDMs. These will generate about 11 % of all CDM cre-dits on the carbon market. It is not bad, but the penetration of less sustainable projects dealing with coal emissions or industrial gas re-duction is still too high and should be addressed by the UN at the next CDM reform.
Windblatt: Which conditions for international funding would you im-prove to promote wind energy in climate politics?Gruet: One needs to prove that an application for a wind project would not get off the ground without CDM financing. This can be an issue, since wind and renewable projects in the CDM often already get state support as they bring more local benefits building up the economy, protecting the environment, and training a skilled work-
force. Moving towards “multiproject baseline” policies could also be a solution, i.e. setting an upper CO2-emission limit for any new power plant applying for CDM finan-cing.
Windblatt: You took part in the climate negotiations in Copenhagen. How obvious became the role of wind energy for climate policy?Gruet: Arriving at the Bella centre, you could immediately notice the 750 kW turbine towering over the centre providing CO2-free energy. Denmark’s landscape around Copenhagen, a climate/wind exhibition in the centre of town, adverts in the subway, two blades set at both entrances of the Bella Centre, GWEC and EWEA booths, a renewable platform in the lunch area, mentions in several side-events and do-zens of wind people roaming the corridors, I think wind’s turnout was the best of all technologies at this event.
Windblatt: What are the next steps after the failure of the Copenhagen summit to bring the international negotiations on track again? Gruet: The so-called Copenhagen Accord is not a climate agree-ment: It doesn’t set any targets, doesn’t really provide financing and is not legally binding. It is a face-saver for the failure of the heads of states. Other fora (MEF G 20 etc.) can help to advance the political commitment, but alternative arenas to the UNFCCC for a binding cli-mate agreement don’t exist and the process will go on, based on the text that was elaborated prior to the show. The US climate bill needs to be passed, and more political will is needed from major countries, to continue negotiations e.g. this summer (probably in Bonn) andCOP 16 in December (Mexico), where we will hopefully reach an agreement. It’s not too late, people want it and we have the technolo-gy to provide it: wind energy!
Instead of concentrating on renewable energies in the quest to reach a
viable agreement on climate protection, politicians are debating whether
carbon capture or reviving nuclear energy is the better means of produ-
cing CO2 free electricity. On behalf of the European Wind Energy Associa-
tion (EWEA), Rémi Gruet, is promoting the potential of wind energy at the
climate negotiations.
Rémi Gruet.
Pcitu
re: R
émi G
ruet